Keeler: CSU Rams legend David Roddy’s advice for Rams star Kyle Jorgensen amid transfer rumors: ‘NBA will find you’



Keeler: CSU Rams legend David Roddy’s advice for Rams star Kyle Jorgensen amid transfer rumors: ‘NBA will find you’

FORT COLLINS — Why Gopher broke, Kyle Jorgensen? NBA first-round draft picks since 2020 from CSU: Two. First-round draft picks since 2020 from the University of Minnesota: Zero.

“That’s the advice:  (The NBA) will find you, no matter what,” Rams legend David Roddy, now a member of the Nuggets, told me at Moby Arena Saturday afternoon after we watched CSU’s eight-game win streak get snapped by Boise State, 78-67.

“So as long as you impact winning and impact the culture the way that we did our best to during my three years  — and then Isaiah Stevens after that, and then Nique Clifford after that. So, yeah, just impacting winning and just changing the culture at (a place), the front offices appreciate that a little bit.”

Jorgensen is a 6-foot-9 forward, your classic stretch-4. He dropped 14 points, two treys and three blocks on the Broncos. He went into the weekend averaging 12 points, 4.3 rebounds and 2.3 assists per game. CSU is 17-8 when he plays, 3-3 when he doesn’t.

As a sophomore, Jorgensen is the kind of talent first-year coach Ali Farokhmanesh could build around, a big, strong dude with range, handles, and serious pro upside. Which is why the kid’s also reportedly on the radar of Power 4 programs who see a potential poach — including, possibly, one program from Jorgensen’s hometown of Minneapolis with a men’s hoops coach whose name rhymes with Piko Dedhed.

“I’ll be honest, I’m not hiding anything. It was tough (last year),” Jorgensen said when I approached him about an hour after the game. “(Staying) was the hardest decision to make last year. (The University of) Minnesota is 10 minutes from my house. That’s right there. So, it was tough. And it’s going to be tough.

“But, you know, I found a second home out here. My family loves it out here. I love it out here. I love the coaching staff. I love playing with these guys every day. Like I said, I don’t want to speak for the future, but I love it out here. I wouldn’t change it for the world.”

It’s a different world now for mid-majors — even bigger ones such as CSU. Different system. Different rules of engagement. Different money. Crazy money.

Minnesota or Iowa or Wisconsin could plop millions on the table for Jorgensen, right now, that the Rams simply can’t. Just as the Gophers could in luring Niko Medved home from FoCo a year ago. Big dogs eat the medium dogs. Medium dogs eat the little dogs. Little dogs reload. It’s the transfer portal circle of life.

Which is why I was curious to seek out Roddy, one of the biggest dawgs CSU hoops ever produced. Like Jorgensen, he’s a Minneapolis kid. Power 4 talent. Power 4 body. NBA skills.